This paper analyzes how the intervention strategies of the National Coffee Federation, which incorporate women in the production of specialty coffees, the device as devices of labor deprivation, in productive dimensions, reproduction and community, in the case of La Union, Narino. Part of the analysis carried out with information from the International Coffee Organization, the Federation, the Departmental and Municipal Committee of Coffee Growers, women special coffee growers, among others, explored the way in which this incorporation operates as a strategy of capitalist accumulation which, in the context of the intersection between the international and sexual division of labor, allows women not to be recognized as real workers. From a research perspective, it is an account of how the FNC-led interventions that incorporate women in the production of specialty coffees are aimed at producing types of subjects that the accumulation of capital requires, on the one hand , those subordinated to the demands of the global market and, on the other hand, the parties interested in the offal to do not only productive labor in flexible conditions, but also other labors that are not recognized and that make competitive production: reproductive labor and community labor.